U.S. Food Waste Challenge

The reduction goal came over two years after the U.S. Food Waste Challenge was launched in June 2013, which had over 4,000 participants by the end of 2014. Organizations within the U.S. food supply chain can participate in the challenge by submitting an activity form or joining through the Food Recovery Challenge.

Food Recovery Hierarchy

At the forefront of all food waste reduction efforts is the Food Recovery Hierarchy from the EPA, which is a great resource for understanding how organizations can identify landfill alternatives for wasted food. The hierarchy ranks ways to prevent and divert wasted food from most preferred to least preferred.

ReFED Roadmap

In March 2016, ReFED (Rethink Food Waste Through Economics and Data) released their roadmap of 27 actionable solutions to reducing food waste. It’s the first data-driven guide for businesses, government, funders, and nonprofits to collectively reduce food waste at scale.

Good Samaritan Act

Passed in 1996, the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Food Donation Act — commonly referred to as just the Good Samaritan Act — provides liability protection for food donations made in good faith. Good faith donors, including individuals, wholesalers, distributors, nonprofits, farmers, gleaners, and restaurants are protected, except in cases of gross negligence (intentionally donating food that is known to cause harm to the recipient).

Confusing date labels contribute to 90% of Americans throwing out perfectly good food, according the ReFED report. There are currently no national or governmental regulations on food date labeling for safety.

Enhanced Tax Deductions for Food Donations

In December 2015, Congress passed a permanent extension of enhanced tax deductions for food donations. When donating inventory of wholesome food to charity, Section 170(e)(3) of the U.S. Tax Code stipulates that businesses are eligible for enhanced tax deductions, up to 15% of their taxable income.

NRDC’s Save the Food campaign

The “Save the Food” ad campaign by the creators of Smokey the Bear (Ad Council) and the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) brings consumer attention to the issue of food waste, aiming to change household behavior. NRDC scientist and zero-waste advocate Dana Gunders revealed the campaign at the 2016 Food Tank Summit in Washington, D.C. in April 2016.

Meal planning tips, shopping guidelines, and information on deciphering “best by” and “use by” dates on products can be found at savethefood.com, along with a comprehensive food storage directory. The campaign also includes digital media, outdoor (billboard), print and web advertising, and a TV PSA.

Watch the journey of a strawberry from the farm to the refrigerator to the garbage, highlighting the resources that it takes to bring food to consumers.

EXPIRED: Food Waste in America film

EXPIRED is a short film that explores how misleading date labels on food products contribute to food waste in America. Spearheaded by the Harvard Food Law and Policy Clinic, EXPIRED aims to show how date label reform can create a large impact in reducing the amount of wasted food.

Ugly Fruit & Veg Twitter handle

Ugly produce has become a star on social media, most notably on the @UglyFruitandVeg Twitter handle and Instagram page. Anti-food waste advocate Jordan Figueiredo runs the account and features ugly fruits and vegetables sent in by fans.

Feeding the 5,000

Feedback, an organization dedicated to public campaign about food waste reduction, hosts their “Feeding the 5,000” events in cities across the world. The events are communal meals for 5,000 people made out of recovered food that would have otherwise gone to waste.

Just Eat It film

The documentary features Canadian filmmakers Grant Baldwin and Jenny Rustemeyer who aim to survive for six months solely on food that would have otherwise gone to waste.

John Oliver segment

Looking for guides and actionable steps on how to reduce food waste? Check out this list of documents, which covers a broad range of food waste topics: food donation, food recovery, gleaning, and food waste assessments.